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At Interfaith Group, A Rabbi Does The Easter Sermon

Interfaith Church

First Posted: 04/13/11 08:05 PM ET Updated: 06/13/11 06:12 AM ET

By Debra Rubin
Religion News Service

SILVER SPRING, Md. (RNS) On the second night of Passover, Rabbi Harold White will lead a traditional seder dinner with matzoh and bitter herbs and all the trimmings.

Five days later, he'll deliver the sermon on Easter Sunday.

That's what life looks like inside the Interfaith Family Project (IFFP) in suburban Washington, where Jewish-Christian couples have decided their kids shouldn't have to choose one faith over the other. Instead, they can do a little of both.

With as many as half of Jews marrying non-Jews, this year's overlap of Passover and Easter is prompting more than a few families to find new ways to navigate the dueling holidays, much like the annual "December dilemma" pitting Christmas against Hanukkah.

Increasingly, such families are turning toward one another for guidance, creating both formal and informal programs. For families at IFFP, it means hosting regular Sunday morning "gatherings" and bringing White and the Rev. Julia Jarvis on as staff clergy to help guide the
project.

Not surprisingly, an interfaith Easter will look and feel a little different. There will be no talk of the Eucharist, White and Jarvis said. Instead, services will focus on renewal.

"For both Jews and Christians, the springtime is the season of rebirth," said White, who was ordained by the Conservative movement's Jewish Theological Seminary.

The project started in 1995 when four women from interfaith marriages were trying to figure out what to teach their children. IFP now numbers some 120 families and runs a Sunday school that teaches about Judaism, Christianity and Hebrew literacy.

IFFP teaches about Judaism and Christianity separately, but also emphasizes the things they have in common, such as welcoming the stranger and pursuing justice. Many participants consider themselves neither Christian nor Jewish, but simply interfaith, said longtime member Sue Katz Miller.

"No two people are going to have the same belief system, even if they're both Jewish," said Miller, who was raised Jewish by her Jewish father and Episcopal mother.

The group's Sunday gatherings -- "Calling it worship is a bit of a hot-button issue," Miller said -- include reflections from Jarvis or White, secular and religious songs, and prayers. Participants pray both the Lord's Prayer and the Sh'ma, Judaism's most central prayer.

Rather than presenting God as the "Father, Son and the Holy Ghost," or that "Jesus is the only way," Jarvis said, "We teach that Jesus is a historical figure and how he lived."

When Jesus taught his disciples to pray, she said, "he taught them to pray to God and not to him, that he too prayed to God and that he was filled with God, and we are filled with God, too."

"It's not about saying children have to follow Jesus, and not about Jews being the chosen people," said Jarvis, who was ordained in the United Church of Christ.

For White, the group's focus "means that Christians get a better understanding of who they are through a better understanding of Judaism, and Jews get a better understanding of who they are through the study of Christianity."

While IFFP may be among the best organized, it's not the only intentionally interfaith congregation in the U.S. In Philadelphia, two ex-pats from the Washington group are trying to start their own version of IFFP. So far, the group has five families but no clergy.

"There's nothing else like it around," said Felise Shellenberger, who is Jewish. "You can educate your children in a way that's educational, not judgmental and is about both faiths."

The Shellenbergers expect some seven or eight families to attend this year's Passover seder, where they will use an interfaith text. They're not planning to host an Easter service.

"That is an activity that is very church-centered, unlike a seder, which is very family-centered," said Shellenberger's husband, Mark, a United Methodist. Most families in the group "almost always go to the Christian family's church" for Easter, he said.

In Chicago, the 18-year-old Interfaith Union defines itself as a resource center for interfaith families, working with about a half dozen priests and a handful of rabbis, according to Eileen O'Farrell Smith, the project's director. The group counts about 180 active families, and offers joint Hebrew naming/baptism ceremonies, a Sunday school program for children and Friday evening Shabbat dinner clusters.

While these interfaith groups aim to make Jewish and Christian members equally comfortable, some mainstream religious leaders wonder about the faith that's transmitted to children.

"I don't believe you can be both Jewish and Christian," says Sister Mary Boys, a theologian at Union Theological Seminary in New York and a veteran of Christian-Jewish dialogue. At the same time, she said, "People who are open to learning about another religious tradition will in the process learn more about their own."

Rabbi Jeffrey Wohlberg, the former president of the Conservative movement's Rabbinical Assembly, said religious identification requires not just knowledge about a given faith, but also an "emotional affiliation." He wonders how a child who celebrates two different faiths "gains not only a respect for and an allegiance to key elements" of each, but also an emotional connection to allow him or her to choose one.

For their part, IFFP organizers aren't concerned.

"We're not trying to inculcate any particular belief system," said Miller. "People feel spiritually supported by being together as a community ... independent of any particular credo."

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By Debra Rubin Religion News Service SILVER SPRING, Md. (RNS) On the second night of Passover, Rabbi Harold White will lead a traditional seder dinner with matzoh and bitter herbs and all the trimmin...
By Debra Rubin Religion News Service SILVER SPRING, Md. (RNS) On the second night of Passover, Rabbi Harold White will lead a traditional seder dinner with matzoh and bitter herbs and all the trimmin...
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12:57 PM on 04/26/2011
Teaching Jesus as an 'historical figure' omits the core belief of Christianity, that Jesus was/is the son of God, who was crucified for the sins of humanity and rose to conquer death once and for all. Whether one believes this or nor not, this belief must be included in any explanation of Christianity as a faith.
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Daleri Rileda
Jungle Jargon
07:15 PM on 04/19/2011
“Let every valley be lifted up,
And every mountain and hill be made low;
And let the rough ground become a plain,
And the rugged terrain a broad valley;

Then the glory of the LORD will be revealed,
And all flesh will see it together;
For the mouth of the LORD has spoken.â€
01:37 PM on 04/18/2011
For a truly interfaith interpretation of Easter (and an exploration of what that means for religious pluralism in America), check out this article - http://www.norsemyth.org/2011/04/obama-ostara-president-ponders-easters.html
iflew
Dyno Remediator
09:34 PM on 04/16/2011
Maybe I'm wrong, but to me practicing ritual is a bad substitute for inward worship.

Only GOD knows what he wants for worship. Different faiths, different rituals. The messengers who inform us what is right and wrong may all have their own agenda. Let's assume some have real authority. How can all be wrong? How can all be right? Is ritual right or wrong?

Question, like in Yeshiva!
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
06:45 PM on 04/19/2011
One of the best ways to find out what is "right" as far as what Our Creator wants is to listen to the Scriptures all the way through several times. If your faith only recognizes the Hebrew Scriptures you could listen to and watch on DVD the "Old Testament", I have followed along some of it with an Isaac Leeser Hebrew Scripture translation and they read fairly close to each other. The King James read by Alexander Scourby is fairly easy to listen to and available download on the net FREE or you can get it on DVD for about $10 + $4 postage from ChristianBook.com 1-800-247-4784
12:53 PM on 04/15/2011
While they are clearly ignoring the New Testament and the teachings of Christ, it is nice to see open dialogue between these two faiths.
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BurtonDesque
Fear a Blank Planet
03:33 PM on 04/14/2011
Interfaith: Where everyone gets together to talk about their imaginary friend.
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chaotician1
03:02 PM on 04/14/2011
some mainstream religious leaders wonder about the faith that's transmitted to children.

Ah, the true purpose of religion, to indoctrinate the children into the "faith" of their Fathers and his Priests! No thinking or searching allowed; what you need to know I have told you; to question is to endanger your"faith", risk expulsion from the family, the tribe, your culture! Be afraid, be very afraid!
12:09 PM on 04/14/2011
Having led a number of Jewish-Christian weddings with a rabbi friend over the years this story is hopeful. Yet, my concerns have changed. Will the children be free to choose another faith tradition or no religion? I learned long ago that we best value what we have chosen from alternatives. Many children are offered only one choice; these children are offered two. There are many, many choices in life, including not to have a supernatural faith. Wise parents would raise their kids to make wise, rational choices.
New Yorker
Roman Catholic, Anti-DEATH, Combat Vet, Sinner
10:11 AM on 04/14/2011
Parents need to lead their children in faith, not serve up some tepid "stew" made up of things they don't believe. Interfailth dialogue is good for adults who know what they believe, it is simply confusing and misleading to dump a child into the middle of that stew.
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GraphicMatt
Somebody make me a sandwich!
11:28 AM on 04/14/2011
So says you. Worry about your own children if that's how you feel, and let other parents worry about raising their children.
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BurtonDesque
Fear a Blank Planet
03:33 PM on 04/14/2011
Parents need to lead their children in logic, facts and reason, not serve up some religious BS.
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ManuOB1
A voice crying in the wilderness
07:21 AM on 04/14/2011
Jesus was also a rabbi, so this makes perfect sense.
iflew
Dyno Remediator
01:59 AM on 04/14/2011
Jews, Christians, and Messianic Jews are not very far apart in their hearts. Our religious leaders are the ones who try to stir up intolerance, and point out the ritual differences.

Try watching Sid Roth or Rabbi Meyer for a more tolerant experience.
01:39 AM on 04/14/2011
What exactly does the "interfaith text" look like? Do they sing interfaith hymns to worship the interfaith God? Are they all going to the interfaith heaven?
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CarmenCameron
Prepping 4 US version of French Revolution
12:11 AM on 04/14/2011
"Rabbi Jeffrey Wohlberg, the former president of the Conservative movement's Rabbinical Assembly, said religious identification requires not just knowledge about a given faith, but also an "emotional affiliation." He wonders how a child who celebrates two different faiths "gains not only a respect for and an allegiance to key elements" of each, but also an emotional connection to allow him or her to choose one."

There's his error. The object of any religion is to induce an "emotional affiliation", true, but that if that affiliation is to what can only be wholly true, it is directed toward God, not to religion
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Susan Katz Miller
11:16 PM on 04/13/2011
Religion News Service has already corrected this headline. This is not an Interfaith Church. It is an Interfaith Community. Please correct the headline.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Susan Katz Miller
08:59 AM on 04/14/2011
Headline has now been corrected! Thank you.
11:03 PM on 04/13/2011
I'm unsure about this. Easter as a religious festival is core to the (majority) Christian belief in Jesus as divine, much more than a Jewish preacher or prophet of 2000 years ago, and one that is fully rejected by most Jews. Easter as a cultural event can encompass religious and non-religious alike in secular celebrations (bunnies, chocolates and so on).

I think there is a difference between understanding and respecting other religions and claiming more similarities than differences. Religions often make genuinely irreconcilable claims. 'Interfaith' tends to gloss over the real differences. A recent article in Christianity Today, an evangelical magazine, spoke of multi-faith as promoting friendly competitiveness in seeking converts, recognizing genuine differences - very much US free-market style.

I'm not religious but that seems to be a more realistic position. Alex
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CarmenCameron
Prepping 4 US version of French Revolution
12:40 AM on 04/14/2011
You hit on the central schism, Alex. For about 300 years, a Jew could be a perfect Christian but then the church fathers made Jesus divine officially and the two religions parted ways. What would Jesus say about that decision? I think he answers that in, ""I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God."

Jesus seems to be saying he is just like us in the Father's eyes. And that is what I believe. Many use mental gymnastics to explain that quote away but Jesus was a uniter, not a divider. Religions that divide are not true to him.